See also: Fremantle History Centre

The Fremantle Library has its origins in the establishment of the Mechanics Institute in 1851. The Fremantle Literary Institute was formed in 1868 by the amalgamation of the Mechanics Institute with the Working Men's Association.

The first Literary Institute building.

The Institute occupied a building in Cliff Street on the corner of Dalgety St (now Croke Lane), where the building housing the offices of the Fremantle Herald newspaper now stands. The Literary Institute operated a subscription library. The first librarian was H.W. Young, a former solicitor.

The second Literary Institute building.

The second Fremantle Literary Institute had a reading room as well as loaning books. It was built in 1899 in South Terrace on the corner of Collie St - the building now thought of as the Dome.

There was a movement to establish a ratepayer-supported City Library from the early 1940s and in 1948 was being driven by Cr Evan Davies JP, MLC, with the result that the Fremantle Free Lending Library was opened the following year, in the Literary Institute building. It was renamed the Evan Davies Civic Library in 1956. The first City Librarian, from 1958, was John E.V. Birch. The library was on the first floor along with a chess room. The Civic Library was renamed the Fremantle City Library on its relocation to the ground floor of the Civic Administration Building on the corner of Newman and William Streets on 18 March 1974.

This photo of the now demolished Town Hall Centre is courtesy of Gnangarra, from Wikipedia.

The library was on the ground floor of the Town Hall Centre (on the SE - right - side) until December 2017, when it was relocated to the formers Dockers building at Fremantle Oval before the demolition of the building in the photograph.

The Fremantle Local History Collection was established in 1974, opened to the public in 1976, and was housed from 1994 in a purpose-built extension on the eastern end of the building (visible on the right of the photo above). It was called the Fremantle History Centre from May 2014 — but ceased to exist at the end of 2017 when the building was demolished. It is unlikely that there will ever again be a dedicated, separate Centre. There is, however, a History Librarian, Stewart Alger. The City Library is now in the Walyalup Civic Centre, in the basement, below the water table.

In 2024 the History Centre was given a new home, one the first floor, with a dedicated exhibition space, work area, and small amount of archival storage. Some of the collection had to stay stored off-site.

Librarians

References, Links, Acknowledgements

  1. Meet Jayne Cleave, 14 Aug 2023, by Sara Culverhouse
  • Harris, Pam 2018, '[[../fhs/fs/10/Harris.html|From card catalogue to eBooks: a history of Fremantle City Library, 1851-2016]]', paper presented to the Fremantle [[../fhs/index.html|History Society]] on its [[../fhs/fs/fsday/fsday2016.html|Studies Day 2016]], published in [[../fhs/fs/10/index.html|Fremantle Studies, no. 10.]]
  • See also (on the Battye Library): Jamieson, Ronda 2005, [[../fhs/fs/4/Jamieson.html|'A people with a past and the JS Battye Library of WA history']], Fremantle Studies, 4: 22-31.
Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 22 January, 2018 and hosted at freotopia.org/organisations/library.html (it was last updated on 8 April, 2024), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.